Take-Home Pay UK: Salary Calculators, Deductions, NI and Student Loans

£60,000 After Tax 2026/27 — Take Home Pay on £60k Salary

How much you take home on a £60,000 salary in 2026/27. Full breakdown of income tax at higher rate, National Insurance, student loan deductions, and child benefit impact.

Tax information is based on HMRC rules for the 2026/27 tax year. Tax rules can change — always verify current rates at GOV.UK. This is not tax advice. Consider consulting a qualified tax adviser for your personal situation.

A £60,000 salary takes you well into the higher rate tax band and triggers child benefit considerations. Here’s your full take home pay breakdown for 2026/27.

£60,000 Salary Breakdown 2026/27

ComponentAnnualMonthlyWeekly
Gross salary£60,000£5,000£1,154
Income tax-£9,432-£786-£181
National Insurance-£3,194-£266-£61
Take home pay£47,374£3,948£911

How the Tax Is Calculated

BandTaxable amountRateTax
Personal Allowance£12,5700%£0
Basic rate£37,700 (£12,570–£50,270)20%£7,540
Higher rate£9,730 (£50,270–£60,000)40%£3,892
Total income tax£11,432

You’re now a higher rate taxpayer. £9,730 of your income is taxed at 40% — a key reason why pension contributions become especially tax-efficient at this salary.

National Insurance on £60,000

Earnings bandAmountRateNI
Up to £12,570 (Primary Threshold)£12,5700%£0
£12,570–£50,270 (main rate)£37,7008%£3,016
£50,270–£60,000 (reduced rate)£9,7302%£195
Total employee NI£3,211

Note the NI rate drops from 8% to 2% above the Upper Earnings Limit (£50,270). This is why the marginal rate between £50,270 and £60,000 is 42% (40% tax + 2% NI).

Effective Tax Rates on £60,000

MeasureRate
Marginal tax rate42% (40% IT + 2% NI)
Effective income tax rate19.1%
Effective total deduction rate24.4%
Take home as % of gross75.6%

£60,000 After Tax With Student Loan

DeductionPlan 1Plan 2Plan 4Plan 5Postgrad
Threshold£24,990£27,295£31,395£25,000£21,000
Rate9%9%9%9%6%
Annual deduction£3,151£2,944£2,574£3,150£2,340
Take home after SL£44,223£44,430£44,800£44,224£45,034

At £60,000 with Plan 2 and postgraduate loans, combined deductions are £5,284/year (£440/month).

£60,000 After Tax in Scotland

BandTaxable amountRateTax
Personal Allowance£12,5700%£0
Starter rate£2,306 (to £14,876)19%£438
Basic rate£10,752 (to £25,628)20%£2,150
Intermediate rate£18,035 (to £43,663)21%£3,787
Higher rate£16,337 (to £60,000)42%£6,862
Total Scottish income tax£13,237
Take home (Scotland)£43,552

In Scotland, you pay about £1,805 more income tax per year on £60,000 — roughly £150 per month.

Child Benefit Impact at £60,000

The High Income Child Benefit Charge (HICBC) now starts at £60,000. Here’s the impact by number of children:

ChildrenAnnual child benefitHICBC at £60,000Net benefit
1£1,354£0£1,354
2£2,251£0£2,251
3£3,148£0£3,148

At exactly £60,000, you keep full child benefit. But every £200 of income above £60,000 costs 1% of your total child benefit — at £80,000 it’s fully clawed back.

Pension contributions reduce your adjusted net income. If you earn £65,000 and contribute £5,000 to a pension, your adjusted income is £60,000 and you avoid the charge entirely.

Tax Planning at £60,000

At this salary level, proactive tax planning makes a real difference:

StrategyAnnual saving
Pension contribution (£5k via salary sacrifice)£2,100 tax + NI saving
Marriage AllowanceNot available (above £50,270)
Gift Aid donations (£1,000)£250 higher rate relief
Salary sacrifice EV scheme (£500/month)Up to £2,520/year

Why Pension Contributions Are So Valuable

Every £1 you contribute to a pension via salary sacrifice saves 42p in tax and NI at the higher rate. That means a £500/month pension contribution only costs you £290 in reduced take home pay — but puts the full £500 into your pension.

What Jobs Pay £60,000?

£60,000 places you in roughly the top 15% of UK full-time earners. Roles at this level are typically heads of department, senior managers, experienced partners, or people in high-demand technical or professional specialisms.

Job / roleTypical rangeNotes
NHS Consultant (starting)¥99,532–£131,964Far above; hospital consultants earn significantly more
Head teacher (medium secondary)£57,000–£75,000Leadership pay scale
Senior engineering manager£55,000–£70,000Tech or civil/structural
Solicitor (5–8 years PQE)£55,000–£75,000City firm vs regional
Principal data scientist£58,000–£72,000Strong tech sector growth
Civil service Grade 6 / Deputy Director£57,000–£67,000Senior government role
Actuarial analyst (qualified)£55,000–£68,000Financial services
GP partner (NHS, established)£60,000–£120,000Varies hugely by list size

The Child Benefit Warning at £60,000

At exactly £60,000 you are right at the threshold where the High Income Child Benefit Charge (HICBC) begins. If you or your partner claims Child Benefit and either of you earns above £60,000, you’ll face a tax clawback on the benefit. The charge is 1% of Child Benefit for every £200 earned above £60,000:

IncomeChild Benefit (1 child, £26.05/wk)Charge owedNet benefit
£60,000£1,354/year£0£1,354
£62,000£1,354/year£271£1,083
£65,000£1,354/year£677£677
£80,000+£1,354/year£1,354£0

If you have children, the effective marginal tax rate on earnings between £60,000 and £80,000 is higher than 40% once the HICBC is factored in. Pension salary sacrifice is the most effective way to reduce your adjusted net income below £60,000 and protect the child benefit you receive in full.

Tax Strategy at £60,000

StrategyAnnual savingHow
Pension salary sacrifice (£10k)~£4,200Reduces taxable income to £50k, saves higher rate tax + NI
Gift Aid donationsUp to 40% gross reliefExtend basic rate band
EV salary sacrifice (£6k/year)~£2,520Company car tax savings in addition
Cycle to work (max £3,500/yr value)~£1,470For regular commuters
HICBC avoidance (1 child, pension £2k)£1,354Use salary sacrifice to stay below £60k

Monthly Budget on £60,000

With approximately £3,676/month take-home (no student loan, no pension deduction), £60,000 provides genuine financial comfort in most of the UK:

CategoryMonthlyNotes
Housing (mortgage or rent, mid-range)£900–£1,400Could own a 3-bed in most regions
Pension (10% total contributions)£500After relief, costs ~£290 take-home
ISA savings£400–£600Stocks & Shares ISA
Bills, food, transport£700–£900Full household
Children’s costs (if applicable)£300–£600Childcare, activities
Leisure and holidays£300–£5002–3 holidays/year possible

At £60,000, if you live outside London, you can own a home, build an ISA, contribute meaningfully to a pension, have children, and holiday twice a year without stretching dangerously. In London, the picture is more constrained but still very workable.

Sources

  1. HMRC — Income Tax rates and Personal Allowances
  2. HMRC — National Insurance rates